Revision as of 12:13, 14 July 2008 by imported>Jitse Niesen
In mathematics, particularly in the branch known as functional analysis, a Banach space is a complete normed space. It is named after famed Hungarian-Polish mathematician Stefan Banach.
The space of all continous complex (resp. real) linear functionals of a complex (resp. real) Banach space is called its dual space. This dual space is also a Banach space when endowed with the operator norm on the continuous (hence, bounded) linear functionals.
Examples of Banach spaces
1. The Euclidean space
with any norm is a Banach space. More generally, any finite dimensional normed space is a Banach space (due to its isomorphism to some Euclidean space).
2. Let
,
, denote the space of all complex-valued measurable functions on the unit circle
of the complex plane (with respect to the Haar measure
on
) satisfying:
,
if
, or
![{\displaystyle \mathop {{\rm {ess}}\sup } _{z\in \mathbb {T} }|f(z)|<\infty ,}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/dc2e4524c465bb316e8ecfeae8e32fc35fe573f9)
if
. Then
is a Banach space with a norm
defined by
,
if
, or
![{\displaystyle \|f\|_{\infty }=\mathop {{\rm {ess}}\sup } _{z\in \mathbb {T} }|f(z)|,}](https://wikimedia.org/api/rest_v1/media/math/render/svg/96681702d871ec712d39137aec0d978abd488293)
if
. The case p = 2 is special since it is also a Hilbert space and is in fact the only Hilbert space among the
spaces,
.